Publications by authors named "M Palmai"

Extracellular vesicles (EVs), sub-micrometer lipid-bound particles released by most cells, are considered a novel area in both biology and medicine. Among characterization methods, infrared (IR) spectroscopy, especially attenuated total reflection (ATR), is a rapidly emerging label-free tool for molecular characterization of EVs. The relatively low number of vesicles in biological fluids (∼10 particle/mL), however, and the complex content of the EVs' milieu (protein aggregates, lipoproteins, buffer molecules) might result in poor signal-to-noise ratio in the IR analysis of EVs.

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Article Synopsis
  • A novel methodology combining asymmetrical flow field-flow fractionation (AF4) with ICP-MS and size fraction-targeted isotope dilution analysis (IDA) has been developed to measure nanoscale silica (SiO) mass fractions.
  • The approach involved synthesizing and characterizing Si-enriched SiO nanoparticles for use as internal standards in double and single IDA analyses, achieving measurement uncertainties of 4% and 8% in different matrices.
  • The method demonstrated high accuracy with a recovery rate of 95.6% in food samples, and results from IDA correlated well with those from external calibration, indicating effectiveness in characterizing nanoscale silica.
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Multiple exciton physics in semiconductor nanocrystals play an important role in optoelectronic devices. This work investigates radially alloyed CdZnSe/CdS nanocrystals with suppressed Auger recombination due to the spatial separation of carriers, which also underpins their performance in optical gain and scintillation experiments. Due to suppressed Auger recombination, the biexciton lifetime is greater than 10 ns, much longer than most nanocrystals.

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This study explores the transport and retention of CdSe/ZnS quantum dot (QD) nanoparticles in water-saturated sand columns as a function of electrolytes (Na and Ca), ionic strength, organic ligand citrate, and Suwannee River natural organic matter (SRNOM). Numerical simulations were carried out to understand the mechanisms that govern the transport and interactions of QDs in porous media and to assess how environmental parameters impact these mechanisms. An increase in the ionic strength of NaCl and CaCl increased QDs retention in porous media.

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Materials for studying biological interactions and for alternative energy applications are continuously under development. Semiconductor quantum dots are a major part of this landscape due to their tunable optoelectronic properties. Size-dependent quantum confinement effects have been utilized to create materials with tunable bandgaps and Auger recombination rates.

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